But the critical question was always simple: does this administration represent a break with the pattern of the last 40 years… or a continuation of it?

All Too Human

Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush II, Obama – all of them have taken our political economy in essentially the same direction. More debt. More Deep State control. More consolidation of power in the executive branch (including the military).

A new president always has some influence. Typically, he can rearrange the furniture and hand out some choice sinecures.

But not since John F. Kennedy has any president dared to change the direction the government is going or challenge the real power of those who run it.

And today, it would take an almost superhuman leader to do so.

Mr. Trump sounded, at times, as if he posed a threat to the elite. Liberals acted as though he were a devilish scourge sent by evil gods.

Conservatives allowed themselves to believe he was the long-awaited messiah.

And now we see that “The Donald” – for all his late-night tweets and bull-in-a-china-shop bluster – is all too human, prone to sin and error… just like the rest of us.

Most likely, the important trends of the last four decades will intensify as the insiders use the chaos and distraction of the Trump team as cover to take even more power and wealth from the American people.

In short, our guess is that there will be plenty of little surprises coming from this administration, but no big ones.

President Trump has already proposed to shuffle more cash to the generals and to the jailers. Soon, we will see more money grabs… from the insiders in finance.

No Correction

Among the coming non-surprises will be the feds’ reaction to a crash on Wall Street… or a recession on Main Street.

Here’s a shorthand for how it will probably go down: crash and/or recession = QE4, direct asset purchasing by Fed, and helicopter money = more wealth for the cronies.

The U.S. economic expansion – albeit weak by historic standards – has gone on for 93 months. That makes it the third longest in history.

If it goes on another 27 months, it will set a new record: the longest expansion on record uninterrupted by a recession.

Although that sounds like an achievement, it is like setting a new record for eating jalapeno peppers: you know you’re going to be sick soon.

Economies make mistakes; corrections clean them up. Typically, the interest rate serves as a “hurdle.” If your project can’t produce enough money to pay for the cost of the capital that went into it, it gets eliminated.

But if you reduce the cost of capital to almost nothing by way of ultra-low interest rates, you never have to reckon with your mistakes. Today, the hurdle is so low, you can’t even trip over it.

The errors stay in place – misallocating more precious savings and consuming more real wealth.

Irrelevant Rate Hike

Meanwhile, the stock market is at record levels.

On a CAPE ratio basis – which looks at stock prices relative to the average of the last 10 years of earnings – only three times since 1929 has the S&P 500 been so pricey, all of them in the last 18 years: first in 1999, then in 2007, and again now.

And like the business expansion, this bull market must contain trillions of dollars of uncorrected errors.

And for the same reason: when capital is almost free, it’s hard for businesses to stumble. They don’t go out of business… They just refinance… merge… acquire a competitor… and buy more of their own shares.

But wait… CBC News reports:

Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen gave investors a pretty clear sign on Friday that the U.S. central bank is likely to raise its benchmark interest rate later this month – and more hikes to follow later this year.

In a speech on the central bank’s economic outlook at the Executives’ Club of Chicago on Friday, the Fed chair told the gathered audience that a slight increase to the federal funds rate would be “appropriate” when the bank next meets for a two-day policy meeting on March 14 and 15.

And here we can be clear about what the Fed won’t do…

There will be no big surprise coming from that quarter either: the Fed will only raise rates to the extent that it is irrelevant.

In its meeting, the members of the Fed’s policy setting committee, the FOMC, will vote on whether to raise rates one-quarter of a percentage point.

We don’t know which way that will go. But we know it won’t matter. Because if it did matter, they wouldn’t do it.

That’s really what Ms. Yellen means by “appropriate.” It will only be appropriate if it doesn’t cause or exacerbate a correction; that is, they will only raise rates as long as it doesn’t interfere with the debt bubble.

If the Fed’s “data” appear weak… and even a tiny increase might prick the bubble… there’ll be no rate increase.

In Sync

The deeper meaning of this is that the Fed, Wall Street, the Pentagon, and Team Trump are all in sync.

None wants to upset this apple cart. It would reveal too many rotten pieces of fruit in the pile. All now collude with the media to keep the public distracted and off-balance, while the whole shebang keeps rolling along.

The Trump administration picks unnecessary fights with unimportant adversaries… pretending to be defending the common man. The media is confused… and confuses the public even further.

The Pentagon goes about its business… happily scaring the public in order to transfer money and power to itself and its crony pals.

Wall Street provides the illusion of prosperity… bidding up stock prices as though they were made more valuable by the administration’s dumb-head policies.

And the Fed provides as much fake money as necessary to keep the scam alive.

But the first big test can’t be long in coming. The feds are running up against their debt ceiling.

There again, the sound and fury will sell newspapers. Democrats will fume. Republicans will fret. But it will be essentially meaningless agitprop.

All of the main players are firmly committed to more spending. They won’t let prudent legislation or a $20 trillion deficit stand in their way.

Here’s pseudonymous blogger Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge:

While in recent weeks there has been a material increase in Fed balance sheet normalization chatter, according to a new report from Deutsche Bank analysts, it may all be for nothing for one simple reason: should the U.S. encounter a recession in the next several years, the most likely reaction by the Fed would be another $1 trillion in QE, delaying indefinitely any expectations for a return to a “normal” balance sheet.

No return to “normal.” Not voluntarily. Empires don’t back up. And bubbles don’t prick themselves.

Regards,

Bill

Further Reading: You can see more pictures from Bill at the annual Bonner & Partners Family Office meeting right here.

Market Insight

BY CHRIS LOWE, EDITOR AT LARGE, Bonner & partners

What’s the best-performing global stock market since President Trump’s inauguration?

The answer may surprise you…

Because it’s also the worst-performing global stock market since Trump’s win over Hillary Clinton on Election Day.

The answer to this riddle: Mexico.

Today’s chart is of the iShares MSCI Mexico Capped ETF (EWW). It tracks the performance of a broad range of Mexican stocks.

And as you can see, EWW is down 9% since Election Day – making it the WORST-performing country stock market over this period.

But it’s up 12.5% since Inauguration Day – making it the BEST-performing country stock market over the following period.

Why such a roller-coaster ride?

One explanation is that investors panicked and dumped Mexican stocks based on candidate Trump’s fiery rhetoric on trade south of the border.

They then started to re-evaluate this bearish stance based on what they’ve since learned of President Trump.

Further evidence, as Bill says, that never before has politics been so important for markets.

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Mailbag

Bill’s questioning of what a Trump presidency means – especially when it comes to the warfare and welfare state – continues to get a mixed response in the mailbag. Here are some of the responses we received to last Wednesday’s issue, “Trump’s Speech: No Cliché Left Behind.”

It’s not your message is wrong, the trouble is too much negativity. We all need a positive message now and then. Or even one that is negative, if done with your positive sense of humor.

– Mike Q.

Being from, and living in, Switzerland, I can assure you that your views of the current economy and “Mr. T.” are certainly shared by most people I know.

– Andy F.

Keep telling it the way it is, your loyal subscriber.

– Kevin L.

As the Aussies say, perhaps we all need a “cup of tea, a powder, and a good lie down.” It took 250 years for the Deep State to insinuate itself into the everyday lives of Americans. For the past eight, we have seen a strong effort by outside forces to create a European-like socialism in this country which, with the defeat of Hillary Clinton, has temporarily paused.

All of Bill’s comments about the "same old, same old" may be true. The critters of the Swamp may still roam freely, but a bullet has been dodged, and new opportunities are upon us, though they must proceed in baby steps.

– Jim B.

Where were all these people that are asking us to give the president a chance when President Obama came into office?

Remember within days of Obama’s election the GOP gang vowed to be against everything he would propose so he would not be re-elected. Mitch McConnell was the leader of this gang. He started all this division and magnified it.